function and form of a command center sessions/ts14... · 2016. 2. 29. · objectives . after...
TRANSCRIPT
Function and Form of a Command Center
Presentation to:
Advanced Healthcare Emergency Management Course
Objectives
After completing this lesson, you should be able to:
• Identify the purpose of a Command Center
• Differentiate a Command Center from an EOC
• Differentiate Command Center “function” from “form”
• Identify key tasks that take place in a Command Center
• Identify major design considerations for a Command Center
• Understand levels of Command Center activation and factors that determine those levels
True or False?
The Command Center is really a place where… Uncomfortable people meet in cramped conditions to play unfamiliar roles making unpopular decisions based on inadequate information in much too little time.
What is a Command Center?
A central location to provide command, coordination and decision-making in
support of the incident response
Command Center vs. Emergency Operations Center (EOC)
Command Center • Focused on Command
and Control
• Usually organization/ facility-specific
EOC • Focused on Coordination
of response/recovery activities
• May have representation from multiple agencies/ organizations
What is the Purpose of a Command Center?
To gather and process all of the information
required to manage incident(s) and situational awareness…quickly and effectively.
What Makes the Command Center Work?
Good Function and
Good Form
FUNCTION: Key Tasks of the Command Center
• Communication and Intelligence • Command and Control • Coordination and Documentation
FUNCTION: A Closer Look
Communication and Intelligence
Intelligence To optimize decision-making, incoming messages and information must be:
• Gathered • Evaluated/verified • Analyzed • Categorized • Displayed
Communication To optimize situational awareness, ongoing communication is necessary with:
• Command and General staff
• Executive leadership • Staff throughout the
organization • External partners (local
and regional)
FUNCTION: A Closer Look
Command and Control
Command: The act of directing, ordering, or controlling by virtue of
explicit statutory, regulatory, or delegated authority
Command and Control • Manage by objectives, relying on an Incident Action Plan • Adhere to chain of command and unity of command
principles • Establish and maintain a common operating picture • Make decisions and assign tasks • Prioritize, deploy, and track critical resources • Transfer command when appropriate
FUNCTION: A Closer Look
Coordination and Documentation Coordination Internally:
• Command Center (Command and General staff)
• Executives • Departments
Externally: • Local emergency management • Response partners • Healthcare partners • Media • Regional/State partners
Documentation For legal and cost-recovery purposes, documentation of info received and response steps taken to include:
• ICS assignments • Incident logs • Plans • Response actions • Use of resources • Costs incurred • Timeline of activities
So what makes the function of a Command Center effective?
• Use of basic management principles (Incident Command System)
• A good concept of operations
• Objective-based incident action planning
• Trained staff
• Delegation
• Unity of command (report to only one supervisor)
• Span of control (3 to 7 subordinates; 5 is optimal)
• Support staff
• Good use of technology
• Adequate space
• Other?
FORM:
Command Center Location
The Command Center location is driven by many factors: • Space availability • Political decisions • Accessibility • Proximity to hazards • Others?
FORM:
Design Considerations
Survivability
Redundancy
Communications
Flexibility
Security
FORM: Design Considerations
Survivability
• Command Center remains operational during incident (for instance, you may not want it to be in a Board Room that has a whole wall of windows, if located in a tornado-prone region)
• Backup Command Center is pre-designated and able to be activated and operational when needed (exercise the backup Command Center!)
• Closely aligned to Survivability
• Linked to the number of redundant systems that support the Command Center (IT, communications, utilities, generator power, etc.)
• Generator powered, BUT…a backup to the generator (One thing you can count on in a power outage is that generators will fail.)
FORM: Design Considerations Redundancy
Remember:
The Command Center exists for command and control
purposes by gaining/maintaining situational awareness and coordinating resources and
response activities; therefore…
Communication is KEY!!!
FORM: Design Considerations Communications
Requires multiple communication systems:
• Hardline phones (landline/T1 lines)
• Cell phones • Satellite phones • Multiple radio systems (800 mghz, etc.)
• Amateur radio (HAM operators)
• IT/computers/projectors • Internet connection/WebEOC
(GHA911, Public Health)
• SouthernLINC • Television (cable and “rabbit ears”)
• Weather radio • Other?
Design flexibility for: • Scalable operations (requiring additional staff)
• Mission requirements (short activation vs. long activation)
• Information management and display (wall space, overhead projection, easels, whiteboards, etc.)
• New technology (requiring different wiring, etc.)
Design Considerations Flexibility
Access control (card readers, security checkpoints, etc.)
• Limit extra bodies • Reduce chaos • Away from media access
Design Considerations Security
Form Follows Function
Regardless of the space and setup you have, always remember that
FUNCTION is more important than form.
The exterior of the new "Arlen Specter Headquarters and Emergency Operations Center", otherwise known as Building 21, located on CDC's Roybal campus in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by James Gathany)
CDC Presentation by Julie L. Gerberding, M.D., M.P.H. Before the U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee On Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education March 9, 2007
Does YOUR Command Center look like this?
BUT!
OR like this?
OR this?
Grady Health System
Command Center
Effingham Health System
Command Center
Remember:
Command Center Activation Levels
• Determined by the organization (examples: monitoring, partial, full OR Level 1, 2 or 3, other?)
• Take into account: - Type of incident - Location of incident - Impact of incident - Level of staffing - Resources
Command Center Facility Considerations
Communications Room Consider using separate but adjacent space to keep noise pollution and interference in check.
Command Center Facility Considerations
• Back-up power • Potable water • HVAC / air quality
Concerns • Weather monitoring • Seating • Computers • Break-out rooms
• Telephones (multiple lines in and out)
• Alternate communications
• Video • Large screen display/
multiple displays • Meeting space • Food • “Chill-out” space • Other?
• Problems when arranging and sharing space include: - Noise - Distraction - Clutter
• Additionally, when sharing space, consider: - Conflicts - Set-up time - Storage
Space Challenges
Practical Activity
My Command Center
Function and Form of the Command Center
Questions?